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This past week, the venerable Martin Wolf, chief economics commentator for The Financial Times, used his column to declare the Trump administration and, by extension, the United States “the enemy of the West.” “Today,” Wolf wrote, “autocracies [are] increasingly confident,” and “the United States is moving to their side.” According to the subhead on the column, “Washington has decided to abandon…its postwar role in the world.” Meanwhile, Wolf cites the (in his estimation) august Franklin Roosevelt, as he complains that the United States “has decided instead to become just another great power, indifferent to anything but its short-term interests.”
The ironies here—as well as the historical ignorance—abound.
To start, one would imagine that Wolf, an educated man with two degrees from Oxford, might know that it was his countryman (and two-time Prime Minister), Henry John Temple (i.e. Lord Palmerston), who declared in a speech in the House of Commons that “We have no eternal allies, and we have no perpetual enemies. Our interests are eternal and perpetual, and those interests it is our duty to follow.” Wolf might also be expected to know that this statement was repeated—more famously and more pithily—by Henry Kissinger, perhaps the quintessential American diplomat in the supposedly vaunted postwar order. Kissinger, like Palmerston and Trump (apparently) understood that a nation that pursues anything other than its interests is foolish, faithless, and, in time, doomed.
Almost from the moment the United States entered World War II, Roosevelt was planning how best to achieve the goal he inherited from his former boss and Progressive predecessor, Woodrow Wilson. Wilson’s goal, of course, was “global governance” under the League of Nations, a goal that the U.S. Senate, mercifully, denied him. Regrettably, Roosevelt shared Wilson’s dream. The political scientist and historian of the Cold War, Amos Perlmutter, wrote that Roosevelt’s “vision for a postwar world was neo-Wilsonian, totally at odds with reality. He would help create a new international order, presided over in an equal partnership by the two emerging superpowers, the United States and the USSR, and buttressed by the newly created world organization, the United Nations.” Like Wilson, Roosevelt sought to fix the world by bringing the whole of it under the control of a handful of its most benevolent and brilliant men—himself included, naturally.
The catch, of course, was that in order to believe that he could effectuate his plan for the postwar global order, Roosevelt also had to believe that it would be received positively by the man who turned out to be the most proficient mass murderer in the war, Josef Stalin. Remarkably, Roosevelt did, in fact, believe just that. He repeatedly told his staff and others that he was convinced that the man he affectionately called “Uncle Joe” would eagerly welcome his friendship and American entreaties to share governance of the world jointly. They would, he believed, be the closest of allies and the best of friends. In 1943, before ever even meeting Stalin, FDR told his first ambassador to the USSR, William Bullit, that “I have just a hunch that Stalin doesn’t want anything but security for his country, and I think that if I give him everything I possibly can and ask nothing from him in return, noblesse oblige, he won’t try to annex anything and will work for a world democracy and peace.”
Perhaps the new world order is in the middle of a change back to an older world order that doesn’t include projects like the WEF, UN and EU. It looks like we are moving from a unipolar world to a multipolar world and Trump and crew are helping usher in the change because they realize that we cannot remain unipolar any longer due to changing power relationships. It looks like they are trying to make and insure a place for us in this new old world order from before Wilson, Roosevelt and their crews.
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In short that ********** negotiated in bad faith and then was stupid enough to admit it on national television.
**** him, **** his nation, **** them all.
Pull all aid to Ukraine -- every bit of it. All money, all arms, all logistics, all humanitarian assistance, all grid assistance and equipment, all of it.
You negotiate in bad faith and try to run a line of guilt on national television you get nothing.
He's lucky he wasn't immediately escorted to his aircraft, told to get the **** out of US airspace escorted by armed fighters -- and then turned into red mist via a missile from said fighters up his ass as soon as he cleared said airspace.
Period.
I think that Trump and crew probably did the worst that they could do for Z. They sent him back to England and Ukraine in disgrace and nothing in hand. How do you think the psychopaths in Ukraine are going to take this? I think he may not survive this mistake very long.
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20 sats \ 1 reply \ @Bell_curve 19h
symolic support from EU
They don't have the money to help Ukraine, absorb migrants, support a welfare state and green new deal initiatives
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So, everybody FAFO’ed. I think the FO part is going to come down very hard on all the FA’ers. That includes all of the EU.
I think the only support from the EU will be hot air. I think the population would revolt if the Tyrants decided to throw the people into the meat grinder. The motherWEFers would be tree and lamppost ornaments really quickly, or, perhaps, get a shaving by the French razor.
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